Pages

Monday, January 19, 2009

University of Pittsburgh archivists are using humidifiers, muslin fabric and Magic Rub erasers to recover valuable and potentially lifesaving information from cracked and faded coal industry maps, some more than a century old.

The work is part of an ongoing effort to catalog, conserve and prepare the maps, some dating to the 1850s, for a statewide digital database that can be used by the industry and the public.

Pitt announced last week that $200,000 has been pledged to facilitate the Consol Energy Mine Map Preservation Project. Consol has put up $100,000, the state Department of Environmental Protection is giving $75,000, and the federal Office of Surface Mining is chipping in $25,000.

"These maps are not only historically significant, they also serve as vital sources of information to improve public safety, protect the environment, safeguard active miners and improve economic development," said Thomas Shope, director of OSM's Appalachian Region.

The bulk of the maps, along with mining logs, records, survey books, mine artifacts and photographs, were donated by Consol to the Pitt archives from 1991 to 2004. Those materials date from the 1890s through the first half of the 20th century and include more than 8,000 individual maps.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Research Resolutions

The start of every New Year is a time for reflection about our personal and professional accomplishments during the previous 12 months. It's also the perfect opportunity to re-evaluate and identify areas for improvement. You can also use January to set some family history research resolutions. Here are five possibilities:

1. Get Some Goals – Formulate one or more specific research goals. What do you want to learn? Your ancestor's marriage date? His spouses name? Finding great-grandpa's immigration date/passenger list? Be as specific as possible.

2. Set Your Strategy – Record as much as you can from original documents and records. Include names and spelling variations, family relationships, dates of birth, marriage, and death. Make guesses about what you already know (estimate when your ancestors married; speculate on the spouses name; identify a range of possible immigration dates, etc.).

3. Seek Your Sources – Research which records will likely prove your hypotheses. Find out if they're available, where to get them, and in what format. List all options. Then, decide on the order in which you'll seek the records, and how to get them.

4. Document, Document, Document – It's often said that genealogy without documentation is mythology. Cite all of your sources carefully. For guidance, consult Elizabeth Shown Mills books, Evidence! Citation & Analysis for the Family Historian ($16.95 US) and Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace ($49.95 US for Hardcover, or $24.95 PDF version available via download from Footnote).

5. Review, Revise, Recharge – Review notes from your family history conversations, your genealogical software, and collected documents. Then, make detailed notes, and add any new data to your charts. Revise/update as necessary and make changes to your approach.

You can set additional goals, but these five should get you off and running.